Regulation of AI – introduction
AI providers and users are operating in an AI market regulated on a territory by territory basis while dealing with a growing and complicated web of overlapping global standards and alliances. Click [here] to read more.
Part 1 – AI regulation in the UK
Existing regulators are using context-specific approaches, taking the lead in guiding the development and use of AI using the five principles outlined in the AI white paper published in March 2023. Click [here] to read more.
Part 2 – AI regulation in the EU
The EU AI Act entered into force on 1 August 2024 with the intention of achieving proportionality by setting the level of regulation according to the potential risk the AI can generate to health, safety, fundamental rights or the environment. Click [here] to read more.
Part 3 – AI regulation in the US
President Trump's Executive Order revoked President Biden's Executive Order on AI providing the groundwork for a new approach to AI regulation in the US. Click [here] to read more.
Part 4 – AI regulation globally
A central theme is the importance of international collaboration on identifying AI safety risks and creating risk-based policies, guidelines and standards to ensure safety in light of such risks. Click [here] to read more.
Part 5 – practical considerations
AI focused actors and providers have been focusing on their forthcoming AI obligations and on governance for some time, but it is now prudent for the majority of organisations to turn their attention to the following practicalities. Click [here] to read more.